Title: Storm Damage Assessment Protocol: Overview
1Storm Damage Assessment Protocol Overview
Process
- Developed by
- USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area
- Urban Community Forestry
- In cooperation with
- Davey Resource Group
- USDA Forest Service Northeastern Center for UCF
- USDA Forest Service Northeastern Research Station
2Why Prepare?
3Hurricane Katrina 2005
4Katrina 2005
5Katrina 2005
6Katrina 2005
7Hurricane Isabel 2003
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9Isabel A Storm of Trees
Isabel wreaked havoc on the forest of urban and
suburban trees Many of them are so big that,
when blown over by tropical storm-force winds,
theyre likely to find a power line that was once
thought safely distant. - Pat Michaels
Virginia State Climatologist
101998 Northeast Ice Storm
11FEMA Disaster Aid
12Tree Damage
13Utility Damage
- Transmission tower outside Montreal
14Urban CoreImpacts
15Landscape Scale Damage
Central Vermont - January 1998
16Tornados
Thunderstorms Wind
Snow
17On the ground response and action
18On the ground response and action
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20Standardizing the Assessment
- Easy and accurate method to estimate
- Tree storm damage
- Costs for recovery
- Data quality and integrity
- Simple method for end user
- Quick reporting mechanism
21Overview
- Development
- Sampling Method
- Estimating Engine
- Report Means
- Personal Digital Assistants
- Future
- Resources
22Development - Stage I
- University of Massachusetts
- Dennis Ryan, Professor of Urban Forestry
- Dave Bloniarz, Project Coordinator, USDA
Northeastern Area Center for Urban and Community
Forestry - Started work in 1997
- Wildly varying estimates of storm damage
- Tree work
- Debris
- Community need for speedy method
- Emergency officials need for credibility
23 24 25 26Development - Stage II
- Davey Resource Group Cooperative Agreement
- Chris J. Luley
- Jerry Bond
- Completed protocol (2000-2001)
- Estimation of debris generation based on
information from professionals - Tom Rankin (Asplundh), then with DRC (Mobile, AL)
supplied debris numbers
27Development - Stage II
- Developed spreadsheet template
- Significant interest among communities
28Development Stage III
- Modifications to protocol and software
enhancements - Standardized sampling protocol
- Improved estimation techniques
- Facilitated access and setup
- Publicized protocol
- Work completed Winter of 2004-05
29Why Protocol?
- Protocol implies
- Rigor
- Uniformity
- Adherence
- Three replicable components
- Sampling method
- Estimating engine
- Reporting means
30Storm Damage Assessment Protocol Data Collection